Back to Search Start Over

Eutrophication weakens stabilizing effects of diversity in natural grasslands.

Authors :
Hautier Y
Seabloom EW
Borer ET
Adler PB
Harpole WS
Hillebrand H
Lind EM
MacDougall AS
Stevens CJ
Bakker JD
Buckley YM
Chu C
Collins SL
Daleo P
Damschen EI
Davies KF
Fay PA
Firn J
Gruner DS
Jin VL
Klein JA
Knops JM
La Pierre KJ
Li W
McCulley RL
Melbourne BA
Moore JL
O'Halloran LR
Prober SM
Risch AC
Sankaran M
Schuetz M
Hector A
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2014 Apr 24; Vol. 508 (7497), pp. 521-5. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Feb 16.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Studies of experimental grassland communities have demonstrated that plant diversity can stabilize productivity through species asynchrony, in which decreases in the biomass of some species are compensated for by increases in others. However, it remains unknown whether these findings are relevant to natural ecosystems, especially those for which species diversity is threatened by anthropogenic global change. Here we analyse diversity-stability relationships from 41 grasslands on five continents and examine how these relationships are affected by chronic fertilization, one of the strongest drivers of species loss globally. Unmanipulated communities with more species had greater species asynchrony, resulting in more stable biomass production, generalizing a result from biodiversity experiments to real-world grasslands. However, fertilization weakened the positive effect of diversity on stability. Contrary to expectations, this was not due to species loss after eutrophication but rather to an increase in the temporal variation of productivity in combination with a decrease in species asynchrony in diverse communities. Our results demonstrate separate and synergistic effects of diversity and eutrophication on stability, emphasizing the need to understand how drivers of global change interactively affect the reliable provisioning of ecosystem services in real-world systems.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
508
Issue :
7497
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24531763
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature13014